Sidran Institute (www.sidran.org) is a nonprofit organization founded by Kate Sidran in 1987. Esther Giller is the Chief Executive Officer.

This international organization specializes in forging collaborative, multidisciplinary responses to traumatized individuals and families in settings as diverse as state mental health systems, jails, urban neighborhoods, and faith communities.

Sidran Institute provides:

Education and publications for professional and lay audiences

Trauma information, resources and

Self-care/mutual support programming.

Esther Giller has been quoted in Time, Newsweek, NPR, MSNBC, CBS HealthWatch and other media.

Located in New Britain, CT, the Traumatic Stress Institute is a national provider of training for Risking Connection. Klingberg previously offered RC training through TREATI, but now does so through its Traumatic Stress Institute.
This organization is authorized to provide Risking Connection in:

Kay Saakvitne, Ph.D., is adjunct faculty at the Smith School of Social Work and maintains a private practice. For over 13 years she was the Clinical Director at Trauma, Research, Education and Training Institute (TREATI), where she taught Risking Connection.

Sarah Gamble, Ph.D.,is in private practice in Simsbury, CT. Her work focuses on using positive psychology to provide a safe and supportive relationship so that clients' strengths
can emerge.

Laurie Pearlman, Ph.D., formerly of TREATI, works to make sophisticated information about traumatic stress available to people without the on-going assistance of highly trained professionals. She has worked with Professor Ervin Staub in Rwanda since 1999.

Beth Tabor-Lev, Ph.D., is in private practice in Northampton, MA.

“Only through our connectedness to others can we really know and enhance the self. And only through working on the self can we begin to enhance our connectedness to others.” - Harriet Goldhor Lerner

“Relationships are all there is. Everything in the universe only exists because it is in relationship to everything else. Nothing exists in isolation. We have to stop pretending we are individuals that can go it alone.”- Margaret Wheatley